Friday, May 05, 2006

Obviously undertaken at the behest of the Chinese government, last week's consecration of two bishops of the "Catholic Patriotic Association" signals the unwavering determination of said government to control the Church in China. The Vatican's diplomatic niceties in recent years, orchestrated by Secretary of State Angelo Sodano, have yielded little but arrests of clergy loyal to Rome and similarly contemptuous treatment for some of the faithful. What we're seeing now is the hardening of schism.

We have a schism, and those whom the Holy Spirit has called to resist becoming part of it—at potentially great cost to themselves, to be sure—have ignored the call. These men are not Thomas Mores. The excommunications should proceed apace just to make clear to everybody, especially the true Catholic Church in China, that the CPA is not in communion with the Catholic Church and is in fact a government-controlled fraud. The clergy involved can always be forgiven if they repent, by Christ if not by formal papal decree.

This is just the latest chapter in a story that began back in the fourth century. Governments, even Catholic governments, have long tried to control the Church by controlling episcopal appointments. The old name for it is "caesaropapism." The main reason for resisting it hasn't changed either: it is incompatible with the divine constitution and mission of the Church. In this case, it is incompatible with the most elementary right of conscience: that of religious freedom.

Obviously undertaken at the behest of the Chinese government, last week's consecration of two bishops of the "Catholic Patriotic Association" signals the unwavering determination of said government to control the Church in China. The Vatican's diplomatic niceties in recent years, orchestrated by Secretary of State Angelo Sodano, have yielded little but arrests of clergy loyal to Rome and similarly contemptuous treatment for some of the faithful. What we're seeing now is the hardening of schism.

We have a schism, and those whom the Holy Spirit has called to resist becoming part of it—at potentially great cost to themselves, to be sure—have ignored the call. These men are not Thomas Mores. The excommunications should proceed apace just to make clear to everybody, especially the true Catholic Church in China, that the CPA is not in communion with the Catholic Church and is in fact a government-controlled fraud. The clergy involved can always be forgiven if they repent, by Christ if not by formal papal decree.

This is just the latest chapter in a story that began back in the fourth century. Governments, even Catholic governments, have long tried to control the Church by controlling episcopal appointments. The old name for it is "caesaropapism." The main reason for resisting it hasn't changed either: it is incompatible with the divine constitution and mission of the Church. In this case, it is incompatible with the most elementary right of conscience: that of religious freedom.